In "Our Little Canadian Cousin," the author's
intention is to tell, in a general way and in one defined local setting, the story of Canadian home life in the late 19th century. To Canadians, home life means not merely sitting at a huge fire-place, or brewing and baking in a wide country kitchen, or dancing of an evening, or teaching, or sewing ; but it means the great outdoor life — sleighing, skating, snow-shoeing, hunting,
canoeing, and, above all, " camping out " — the joys that belong to a vast, uncrowded country, where there is " room to play." (Summary from the Author's preface))

NOTE: open the "Link to Text" in a new tab to see it plainly.

How to claim a part, and "how it all works" here
To find a section to record, simply look at point 5. below at the sections. All the ones without names beside them are "up for grabs." Click "Post reply" at the top left of the screen and tell us which section you'd like to read (include the section number from the left-most column in the reader list, please). Read points 6. to 8. below for what to do before, during and after your recording.

Is there a deadline?
We ask that you submit your recorded sections within 6 weeks of placing your claim. Please note that to be fair to the readers who have completed their sections in a timely way, if you haven't submitted your recording(s) after two months, your sections will automatically be re-opened for other readers to claim, unless you post in this thread to request an extension. Extensions will be granted at the discretion of the Book Coordinator. If you cannot do your section, for whatever reason, just let me know and it'll go back to the pool. There's no shame in this; we're all volunteers and things happen.Please do not sign up for more sections than you can complete within the two month deadline.

Please claim sections (the numbers in the first column below)!If this is your first recording, please let me know under which name or pseudonym you'd like to appear in the LibriVox catalogue. We can also link to a personal website/blog.

Please don't download or listen to files belonging to projects in process (unless you are the BC or PL). Our servers are not set up to handle the greater volume of traffic. Please wait until the project has been completed. Thanks!

Magic Window:

BC Admin
======================================================
This paragraph is temporary and will be replaced by the MC with the list of sections and readers (Magic Window) once this project is in the admin system.

DURING recording:Please leave no more than 0.5 to 1 second of silence at the beginning of your recording!

Make sure you add this to the beginning and end of your recording:Start of recording (Intro)

"Chapter [number] of Our Little Canadian Cousin. - This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information, or to volunteer, please visit: librivox DOT org"

At the end of the book, say (in addition):"End of Our Little Canadian Cousin , by Elizabeth Roberts MacDonald . "

Please leave 5 seconds silence at the end of your recording, or 10 seconds for files longer than 30 minutes!

Also, please remember to check this thread frequently for updates!

AFTER recording:Need noise-cleaning?
Listen to your file through headphones. If you can hear some constant background noise (hiss/buzz), you may want to clean it up a bit. The new (free) version 1.3.3. of Audacity (Mac/Win) has much improved noise-cleaning. See this LibriVox wiki page for a complete guide.

ID3 V2 tags
(To find out more about ID3 tags, go to our wiki: http://wiki.librivox.org/index.php/What_is_ID3)
Add the following tags to your .mp3 file (how you do this depends on which software you use – if you are unsure about ID3 tags, send me a message). Please mind upper and lower case!

I will get this wonderful project set up tonight hopefully. The text is on IA so the links will be there.
I'm glad to know that we will finally see how our little Canadian cousins lived a hundred years ago.

Phil Chenevert, The LibriVox Video Guy
You were born to make mistakes; not fake perfection. So get in there and start making mistakds.!

ductapeguy wrote:Hi Phil. Tonight I got the itch to record some audiobook. I recently purchased REAPER after 8 years of audacity, and it is showing alot of promise to streamline my workflow.

Anyway, I'm going to take a crack at chapter 9. It's been a while since I recorded for LV so here goes...

Thank you Sean. Glad you got the itch again. But please remember that the general practice is to request or claim a section and then have the BC assign it to you before recording it. I will put your name by section 9 and once again, it is nice to have you back with us. Please claim as many sections as you would like.

Phil Chenevert, The LibriVox Video Guy
You were born to make mistakes; not fake perfection. So get in there and start making mistakds.!